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Europe needs a re-enlightenment
by Marc Glendening, DM Campaign Director
published in The EuroRealist: September
2005
The
floodgates of democracy have truly burst open. The stunning victories
for democracy that were recorded in the recent French and Dutch referenda
on the European Constitution will lead - whether the political elite
likes it or not – to a major re-examination of the purpose and desirability
of the EU in its entirety.
For
30 years the political class and big business have tried to prevent
any serious discussion about this key issue. They have said that
there was ‘no alternative’ to being inside the EU and that ever greater
political union, including the single currency, was ‘inevitable’. Anybody
who dared to challenge this view was smeared as an out of touch extremist
motivated by ‘racism and xenophobia’. This strategy of political intimidation
now lies in tatters and with, or without, the participation of the pro-EU
elite a war of ideas on this issue will now happen in earnest across
our continent.
The
Democracy Movement is trying to play its part in forcing this much needed,
long overdue, debate through its new campaign entitled Vision
Europe. We are proposing that the EU be replaced by a new forum
facilitating voluntary, purely inter-governmental co-operation called
the Europe of Democracies (EoD).
This
would fuse the roles of the European Free Trade Area and the Council
of Europe. National parliaments would become legally supreme once again.
EoD would thus have no law- making powers. Governments could not be
tied into supporting collective positions on, say, foreign and defence
matters they had no wish to contribute to. It would be a trading area,
not a customs union. Countries would be at liberty to decide for themselves
their trading policy with other nations. So, obviously, goodbye CAP.
Decentralising
powers away from Brussels back to the national parliaments is a necessary,
if not sufficient, step towards the re-democratisation of Europe.
Other reforms need to be implemented, including possible greater use
of referenda, ‘citizens’ initiatives’, for the balance of power between
the people and the political elite to be shifted in the interests of
the former. However, the French and Dutch results now give us a real
opportunity to reverse the tide and bring about a democratic ‘re-Enlightenment’
in our continent.

"The
opportunity now exists for a
Re-Enlightenment; a revival of the idea that those of us low down
the political food chain should be given the opportunity to hold our
rulers to account and freely determine our own destinies."

My
basic thesis is this: The democratic idea was born in part because of
the development of scientific knowledge and the re-discovery of the
classical period that undermined the world-view of the Medieval period.
This was an outlook based on oppressive religious superstition and the
related idea that human society should be based on a strict political
and legal hierarchy. Hence the doctrine of the divine right of kings
to rule and aristocratic feudalism.
The
European Enlightenment, which culminated in the late eighteenth century,
established the revolutionary idea that the physical world was based
on scientific laws and that human beings could come to understand their
physical environment through the application of the power of reason.
We, Enlightenment thinkers such as Hume, Voltaire, Diderot, Turgot and
many others argued, were not the passive victims of strange mystical,
supranatural forces and traditions that could not be questioned. Human
beings, uniquely, had the power of rational investigation and capacity
to make free choices, to shape within the bounds of physical possibility
our own destinies.
This
intellectual revolution then gave birth to the idea that all individuals
should be equal before the law, that there should be free discussion
of ideas, and that all members of a community should be able to give
political expression to their beliefs through a democratic process.
Societies should not be considered the exclusive private property of
their monarchs.
In
the context of Britain, Oliver Cromwell had helped to establish this
progressive position a century earlier. Nationalism became strongly
connected to democracy because if citizens could choose who their rulers
should be and hold them to account periodically, so to should they be
able to decide within reason the boundaries of their political communities.
The
Enlightenment became firmly linked with the anti-imperialist struggle.
Greeks saw no reason why they should be forced to continue living under
Ottoman rule, Italians, Hungarians and Slavs rose up against the Hapsburgs,
and the Americans fought a war of independence against the British Crown.
The Enlightenment gave rise to democracy and to national diversity.
Those of us fighting EU colonialism, I want to argue, are part of
this noble, broadly liberal tradition in European thought.
However,
some later Enlightenment thinkers contributed to the rise of a quite
different, sinister political tendency that we are fighting today. The
origin of this movement lies in the misapplication of the concept of
reason. The belief was that the methodology of the physical sciences
could be applied to human affairs. A technocratic elite, empowered with
a scientistic approach, could ‘plan’ social progress so long as they
had sufficient central control and the political power to make things
happen and force non-conforming individuals into line.
This
authoritarian mindset led to Robbespiere’s Terror. Napoleon Bonaparte’s
regime became the lodestar for this new manifestation of political elitism.
The Prussian philosopher Hegel articulated how a state in the modern,
post aristocratic, Europe could combine the semblance of being democratic
while giving real control over its citizens to a secretive political/bureaucratic
(but not social, hereditary) elite.
Political
diversity, the natural by-product of liberal democracy, thus came to
be seen as dangerous. The role of government was to direct, organise
and where necessary coerce in order to fulfil the collective – and ‘scientific’
- objective.

"As
left-wing academic and cultural commentator Frank Furedi of the Institute
of Ideas argued in the aftermath of the French and Dutch referenda,
the EU supporting political elite fundamentally mistrusts the choices
ordinary people and therefore want to limit popular decision making."

Just
as what might be described as the ‘neo-Hegelians’ came to see free individuals
as a threat to the organised construction of society, so too, especially
after the advent of the First World War they came to view individual
nation states as a threat to World peace and order, as John Laughland
has argued in The Tainted Source: the undemocratic origins of the European
idea. Diverse,
independent nations needed to be disciplined like unruly individual
citizens through the imposition of a higher, overarching authority that
would force them into line.
The
aim was to replicate at the international level the idea of the corporate
state: a controlling body that would bring the divergent interests together
and force them to reconcile their differences for the greater good as
defined by the state elite. It is perhaps no coincidence that the European
Commission was originally named the ‘Higher Authority’.
In
1926 the precurser to today’s European Movement was born and held its
first major event in Vienna. First in Italy, then in Germany, and then
in Vichy France, fascist governments came to power committed to the
idea of uniting Europe politically and preventing, ironically given
the terrible mayhem and slaughter they were responsible for, another
major European war.
While
fascism became terminally discredited after 1945, the idea of a Pan-European
state, again very ironically, gained political momentum culminating
in the creation of the Coal and Steel Community/EEC/EU.
It
is no coincidence, as documented by Laughland, that many of the major
supporters of this organisation had been involved in pre-war fascism
to varying degrees: Paul-Henri Spaak, the Belgian who chaired the
inter-government conference and produced the ‘Spaak Report’ that resulted
in the birth of the EEC had been a member of the Nazi Belgian Workers
party.
Robert
Schuman, like Spaak hailed by the EU as one its ‘founding fathers’,
was a member of the French assembly that voted for its own dissolution
and the transfer of dictatorial powers to Marshall Petain. He then served
as a Vichy minister.
Francois
Mitterand, another former Vichy official and later socialist president
of France and was one of the principal supporters of the Maastricht
treaties and drivers behind the single currency.
Jacques
Delors, president of the European Commission in the 1980s had been
a member of a Vichy paramilitary youth group.
Likewise,
Valery Giscard d’Estaing, later to become a conservative president
and the principal author of the European Constitution, was also a former
open Petainiste.
Of
course, in the change political environment of today’s Europe, the
‘neo-Hegelians’ have had to adopt a much more politically mainstream
and less overtly anti-democratic mode of justification for a Pan-European
government. Of course, they genuinely do not perceive themselves
to be neo-fascists. Unlike their more traditional authoritarian counterparts,
they are not in any way motivated by anti-semitism or racism of any
kind. They tend to use the language of ‘democracy’ and ‘human rights’.
Occasionally, the cat is let out of the bag.
The
neo-Hegelians should not be seen as being fully totalitarian, but, in
essence, can be considered to be part of an illiberal ‘counter-Enlightenment’.
They are better described as ‘post-democrats’ rather than full on
anti-democrats. However, just like Hegel, they are happy to see real
power reside primarily with a largely unaccountable elite.
The
Commission is, of course, unelected and its members enjoy immunity from
prosecution (just like Europol agents). Overtones of the pre-Enlightenment
feudal, aristocratic order. This body includes hundreds of sub-committees
that members of the European Parliament, let alone ordinary EU citizens,
are not allowed to know the composition of. The Council of Ministers
meets in private and 80% of its business is in fact conducted by civil
servants (COREPER). It is an offence under article 108 of the treaty
to in anyway try and lobby the European Central Bank.
Leaving
aside the EU’s real-world undemocratic structure, a transnational authority,
disconnected from a citizenship with a common sense of belonging or
identity, speaking over twenty different languages, and without a single
national media focus to help the process of holding decision makers
to account, will never be properly accountable. That’s just the way
the neo-Hegelians like it.
As
left-wing academic and cultural commentator Frank Furedi of the Institute
of Ideas argued in the aftermath of the French and Dutch referenda,
the EU supporting political elite fundamentally mistrusts the choices
ordinary people and therefore want to limit popular decision making.
He
cites as an example of this elitist mindset Chris Bryant MP,
chairman of the Labour Movement for Europe, who said after the results:
"I confess that I am not a big supporter of referendums.
I believe that they are especially inappropriate when trying to deal
with the intricacies of creating a treaty".
Andrew
Duff MEP, who asks us to believe that he is a ‘Liberal Democrat’,
was equally dubious about the benefits of allowing his fellow citizens
the opportunity to give their verdict on constitutional issues: "the
experience [of the French and Dutch referenda] begs the question
of whether it was ever appropriate to submit the EU Constitution to
a lottery of unco-ordinated national plebiscites".
Likewise
Tory Ken Clarke MP and New Labour economics guru Will Hutton
in The Observer also questioned the wisdom of giving people outside
of the political class a vote on the EU Constitution. Louis XIV and
Charles I come to mind.
Like
most illiberal ideologues, the neo-Hegelians believed that as night
follows day, their centralised vision would come to pass. Each incremental
act of economic union, such as the Single Market, would precipitate
a further act of political integration, such the single currency, and
so on until a de facto and de jure single state based in Brussels would
be established.
This
was Jean Monnet’s so-called ‘neo-functionalist’ strategy for
integration, a prime example of technocratic, scientistic, thinking.
Remember, for people with this mind-set, ordinary people outside of
the hallowed elite are analogous to pawns on a chess board who can be
deterministically engineered into thinking and behaving in a pre-ordained
way. They don’t really think we have free will and this leads to terrible
miscalculations on their part.
The
French and Dutch voters, employing their innate powers of individual
reason and choice, refused to go along with Giscard d’Estaing’s centrally
(and undemocratically) conceived Constitution. The neo-Hegelian project
is now in crisis, the ageing, rusting old battle ship with the enormous
turning circle that is the European Union is listing badly. Without
the new political powers Brussels was anticipating, the euro will soon
confront big problems.
So,
the opportunity now exists for a Re-Enlightenment, a revival of the
idea that those of us low down the political food chain should be given
the opportunity to hold our rulers to account, exist on the same legal
plain as them, and freely determine our own destinies. Replacing the
EU with something like a Europe of Democracies and national independence
is, however just one aspect of this liberal objective. Democratic revitalisation
& restructuring needs to take place within our own countries as
well - the local political elites also need to be brought into line.
But
liberating ourselves from Brussels colonial rule, just as earlier generations
of Europeans successfully defeated other forms of imperialism, is the
necessary condition.

To
obtain your copy of the September 2005 issue of The EuroRealist, send
75p to:
WAEC,
53 Daisybank Crescent, Walsall WS5 3BH
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